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词汇 inapt
释义

Definition of inapt in English:

inapt

adjective ɪnˈaptɪˈnæpt
  • Not suitable or appropriate in the circumstances.

    不合适的,不相称的;不恰当的,不相宜的

    a more inapt name I cannot imagine

    我再也想不出更不合宜的名字了。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I had been comparing the arcs with rainbows, which now seems inapt.
    • An article in last Sunday's San Francisco Chronicle makes a particularly inapt comparison.
    • I will follow the convention of referring to all non-left/liberal ideologies as ‘conservative,’ however inapt that may be.
    • In such circumstances it is inapt to burden the courts of Jersey with this case in any way.
    • Well, many politicians and others use historical allusions, and they almost always are inapt because no two situations are the same.
    • And it strikes me as a singularly inapt analogy to make, an analogy that ought to make one question its user's underlying thinking about the problem.
    • The expression ‘cost of reinstatement, repair or replacement’ is wholly apt in relation to buildings, fixtures, fittings and goods, but wholly inapt in relation to economic loss.
    • Still, this is a somewhat closer matter; the framing of the question in the following paragraph is more clearly inapt.
    • Still, I think that Heidegger, like no other before him, has shown an aspect (and that itself is a laughably inapt term) of our world, an aspect we take for granted and have learned ever more easily to inhabit without thinking.
    • At first glance, the metaphor - a rising tide of mediocrity - seems inapt, even odd.
    • To address the Great Depression, Franklin D. Roosevelt declared national emergency, relying on a generation-old statute that was arguably inapt because it was intended for wartime, and the country was not then at war.
    • There are a number of points making this application inapt.
    • In fact, I have seen this Act described as a treaty and I do not know whether, in real terms, that is an entirely inapt description.
    • But the comparison to Eisenhower's notorious caginess strikes me as quite inapt.
    • Moreover, the use of ‘shall’ in the condition is inapt: the condition was not requiring, merely enabling, the indoor market to the held on up to ten days throughout the year over and above Saturdays and Sundays.
    • I think the metaphor is completely inapt and is really an apples-and-oranges sort of thing.
    • Some analogies are persuasive; other analogies are inapt.
    • Moreover, the use of the adverb ‘suddenly’ in the context is singularly inapt to describe the nature of the change to which the respondent's daughter would be exposed if she were now to be required to move school.
    • That analogy is singularly inapt to this particular situation.
    • They don't seem to realize how the use of this inapt example demonstrates their inability to grasp the nature of new and different conflicts.
    Synonyms
    unsuitable, unfitting, ill-suited, unseemly, unbecoming, unprofessional, unfit, unbefitting, indecorous, improper, lacking in propriety, ungentlemanly, unladylike

Derivatives

  • inaptitude

  • noun ɪnˈaptɪtjuːdɪˈnæptɪt(j)ud
    mass noun
    • Lack of suitability or skill.

      his guileless inaptitude for all worldly affairs
      Example sentencesExamples
      • one can only marvel at the inaptitude of the managers
      • There are other questions and inaptitude that go unanswered except to allow a movie to tie up loose ends quickly and move the plot along.
      • If antirelationality is inherent in all homoness, then Beckett's ‘contagious destruction of relations’ and ‘subversion of relationality’ figure productively in that inherent inaptitude.
      • The constructed legal rationale then is the causal contingency of possession, use, and ‘mental defects’ or ‘characterological inaptitude.’
  • inaptly

  • adverbɪnˈaptliɪˈnæptli
    • Whisper it gently, but at last there are signs that common sense may prevail in the inaptly named ‘war on drugs’.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The inaptly named dump took in 2 billion tonnes of refuse over its lifetime, growing to three times the size of Central Park.
      • Perhaps the word truth is inaptly applied here.
      • The opening episode, inaptly called ‘Rocking the Foundations’, did not begin: it simply dropped viewers into the middle of a situation that had no evident origins.
      • The East London News reported, ‘The week might not inaptly be called the week of strikes - coal men, match girls, parcels postmen, car men, rag, bone and paper porters and pickers.’

Definition of inapt in US English:

inapt

adjectiveiˈnaptɪˈnæpt
  • Not suitable or appropriate in the circumstances.

    不合适的,不相称的;不恰当的,不相宜的

    a more inapt name I cannot imagine

    我再也想不出更不合宜的名字了。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There are a number of points making this application inapt.
    • But the comparison to Eisenhower's notorious caginess strikes me as quite inapt.
    • Moreover, the use of the adverb ‘suddenly’ in the context is singularly inapt to describe the nature of the change to which the respondent's daughter would be exposed if she were now to be required to move school.
    • Moreover, the use of ‘shall’ in the condition is inapt: the condition was not requiring, merely enabling, the indoor market to the held on up to ten days throughout the year over and above Saturdays and Sundays.
    • I will follow the convention of referring to all non-left/liberal ideologies as ‘conservative,’ however inapt that may be.
    • Still, I think that Heidegger, like no other before him, has shown an aspect (and that itself is a laughably inapt term) of our world, an aspect we take for granted and have learned ever more easily to inhabit without thinking.
    • To address the Great Depression, Franklin D. Roosevelt declared national emergency, relying on a generation-old statute that was arguably inapt because it was intended for wartime, and the country was not then at war.
    • They don't seem to realize how the use of this inapt example demonstrates their inability to grasp the nature of new and different conflicts.
    • Still, this is a somewhat closer matter; the framing of the question in the following paragraph is more clearly inapt.
    • In such circumstances it is inapt to burden the courts of Jersey with this case in any way.
    • I think the metaphor is completely inapt and is really an apples-and-oranges sort of thing.
    • Well, many politicians and others use historical allusions, and they almost always are inapt because no two situations are the same.
    • That analogy is singularly inapt to this particular situation.
    • The expression ‘cost of reinstatement, repair or replacement’ is wholly apt in relation to buildings, fixtures, fittings and goods, but wholly inapt in relation to economic loss.
    • And it strikes me as a singularly inapt analogy to make, an analogy that ought to make one question its user's underlying thinking about the problem.
    • I had been comparing the arcs with rainbows, which now seems inapt.
    • In fact, I have seen this Act described as a treaty and I do not know whether, in real terms, that is an entirely inapt description.
    • An article in last Sunday's San Francisco Chronicle makes a particularly inapt comparison.
    • At first glance, the metaphor - a rising tide of mediocrity - seems inapt, even odd.
    • Some analogies are persuasive; other analogies are inapt.
    Synonyms
    unsuitable, unfitting, ill-suited, unseemly, unbecoming, unprofessional, unfit, unbefitting, indecorous, improper, lacking in propriety, ungentlemanly, unladylike
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